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THE DEAD CICADA, THE GHOST, AND THE PASSING OF TIME Benjamin Kaja |
1. fallen cicada, I lifted you from your last green leaf,
2. Autumn winds tiny shriveled eyes color, lightening to spring green. legs, crumpled inward, fetal. thorax, plump and sectioned. wings, immaculate.
3. hot days shorten. time shrunk your thorax appears as if in mid exhale: wings, still translucent, green-web veins
4. many long weeks you set burial planned, body aging, those decaying leaves— as the colors turned in branches something burned the air— your remains, traceless windowsill, stark blank, and restless.
5. I see the silhouette of your on the sill now
6. leaves take turns landing, but not the green leaves like those you fell frost rests like silt in the morning. the katydids, crickets, and cicadas have abandoned
7. it’s your ghost the echoes of memory constantly migrating and it is there I will be chasing the ghost a long way
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